Small teams do not need dozens of AI apps. They need a small stack that covers everyday work without creating tool sprawl. This blueprint shows the minimum useful AI stack.
The Minimum Stack
| Layer | Purpose | Example capabilities |
|---|---|---|
| Assistant | Writing, brainstorming, summarizing | Drafts, explanations, analysis |
| Workspace AI | Docs, email, meetings | Summaries, recaps, task extraction |
| Research layer | Source-backed research | Citations, briefs, comparison |
| Automation layer | Repeat workflows | Routing, reminders, templates |
| Governance layer | Controls and logs | Approved tools, data rules, review |
What to Avoid
- Buying multiple tools for the same job.
- Letting every team choose unrelated AI apps.
- Testing tools without success metrics.
- Ignoring admin controls and data retention.
Stack Scorecard
| Question | Yes/No |
|---|---|
| Does each tool have a named job? | |
| Can admins manage access? | |
| Can outputs be reviewed? | |
| Can the team measure time saved or quality? | |
| Can the stack shrink if usage is low? |
How to Use This
Use this article as a quarterly stack review. Remove tools that duplicate work or cannot show value.
Bottom Line
The best AI stack for a small team is intentionally small: enough to support work, not enough to create chaos.